Syria's Assad says ousted Baathists made mistakes

A picture released by the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) on February 12, 2013, shows Syria's President Bashar al-Assad heading a cabinet meeting in the Presidential palace in Damascus. Ruling party leaders removed in a reshuffle this week had made mistakes while in office, Assad told the Baath party's mouthpiece in an interview published Thursday.
(SANA/AFP/File)

Syria's Vice President Farouk Al-Sharaa pictured in Damascus on April 24, 2007. Ruling party leaders removed in a reshuffle this week -- including al-Sharaa, the only top Syrian official to advocate a political compromise to the country's bloody civil war -- had made mistakes while in office, Syria's President Bashar al-Assad told the Baath party's mouthpiece in an interview published Thursday.
(AFP/File)

DAMASCUS (AFP) – Ruling party leaders removed in a reshuffle this week had made mistakes while in office, Syria's President Bashar al-Assad told the Baath party's mouthpiece in an interview published Thursday.

The interview was published two days after the Baath party announced the names of 16 new leaders, which included none of the party's former chiefs with the exception of Assad, who will remain secretary general.

"When a leader does not solve a series of errors, this leader must be held accountable," Assad told Al-Baath newspaper, without elaborating.

"This is the real role of the (Baath party's) central committee, which is supposed to hold accountable the leaders on a regular basis. This did not happen in recent years," he added.

The central committee should "monitor the leadership's work, evaluate it and hold the leaders accountable", said Assad.

The reshuffle came more than two years into a brutal war that has left more than 100,000 dead in Syria.

"Those defending the nation now are the workers and farmers... some of them are in the army, others defending their land," said Assad.

"The struggle now is between those who are ignorant and those who are aware, between the patriots and the collaborators, between extremists and moderates."

The Baath party has been in power since March 8, 1963.

Until February 2012, the Syrian constitution described the Baath as the ruling party of Syrian society.

Almost a year into an uprising demanding regime change, the constitution was modified and a new article introduced enshrining the principles of pluralism and democracy.

The party's reshuffle was the first since 2005.

Among those removed from the party's leadership was Vice President Farouk al-Sharaa, the only top Syrian official to advocate a political compromise to the country's bloody civil war.

In the same interview Assad renewed his criticism of the Muslim Brotherhood, while saluting Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah and Iran.

Ever since mass protests led to the removal from office of Egypt's Islamist president Mohamed Morsi, Assad and his government have launched numerous attacks on the Muslim Brotherhood.

The Brotherhood's Syrian wing, persecuted for decades in Syria, is a key component of the main opposition National Coalition.

The Brotherhood "takes advantage of religion and uses it as a mask... and it thinks that if you don't agree with it politically, that means you don't stand by God", said Assad.

But "this is not the case with Iran and Hezbollah," he added.

Hezbollah "does not judge people based on religion or sect, but rather on patriotism and politics," said Assad.

One must "distinguish between those who use religion for the benefit of a few, and those who use religion to defend causes that are just and right," the Syrian leader said.

Hezbollah played a key role in the regime's takeover from rebel hands of Qusayr in central Syria. Its fighters are now engaged in battles for rebel districts in the central city of Homs.

Iran has been a steadfast ally of Assad's regime since the rebellion erupted in March 2011.